46 itu,!, Y.; ;, :.,' .' '." , . ":: .. y- \ k:,"; . -:, '. ' ';i. j i25eaut 91 1 * ,J' T$ :' v..,o , 'f""')..':, :" ,,: -' "'.( ... j id , ;;i' m. ;t2#L } : . :"";I ' j'.' .;;;,- ,f . . (.. -:,' '(.':': :.\ I 11 r. t- · .;.::... - J.f ) ifji 1 ,1 THE KEYS you love to touch Soft to the hand, easy on the eyes, they make type- writing thrilling-not tire- some. Oil type-cleaner,: brush-erasers, note-books, pencils - name what you will-Brewer's office sup- plies satisfy. At any of the three convenient stores. For the smart sophisti- cate who would fraction- ize the time spent in re-beautifying between social or business ap- pointments . . . preserv- ing the height of feminine grace and al- lurement the while. FEW, simple, BASIC! Built on twin ideals of SPEED and RESULTS! to be had at B. ALTMAN & Co. FRANKLIN SIMON & CO. SAKS..FIFTH AVENUE ive at II THE 1&!\!! P\2 TDEAL two-room apart- roents-some furnished- southern exposure. Opposite Grace Church... just a step from ALL transit lines. Res- taurant of outstanding cui- sine and service. Seasonal or annual leases. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Owner's representative at the Building . ø realism in miniature { Boats (Power and Sail), Steam Engines, Locomotives, Trains Model -models that thrill, delight and teach. Complete construction sets, scale plans, materials and fittings for every kind of model making. Boucher's is a fascinating shop for men and boys-No store like it anywhere in the world except in London. 415 MADISON AVENUE at 48th ST. FEßRIIAR.Y 8, 19:} 0 tras have offered whole evenIngs of Prokofieff and almost whole weeks of Debussy, Strauss, and Les Six, with moments, even, of Cui; they have given new works by Florent Schmitt, and what were as good as new works in Mozart's "Pariser Symphonie," Massenet's "Cinderella," and Rossini's "Chance Makes the Thief" (written in his teens and charming), the last two given as ballets by Podrecca's Mario- nettes. The popularity of Podrecca's dolls was demonstrated last year, when they came for a day and stayed for a season. This year, five hundred strong, with a corps of twenty-three dressers, manipulators, stringers, and singers to help them out, they packed the enormous Salle Pleyel for weeks. N or was there, in the vast audience, any nonsense about women and chil- dren first. A child was as rare as a hen's tooth, and there were compar- atively few women. In the majority were the basso laughter and beards of those French men who are only boys grown up. L h ' " F ' d '. " e ar s new operetta, re erlque, has ,also been presented here, but it is not up to "The Merry Widow." The love song in the second act is the hit of Central Europe; to us it seemed almost good music, and therefore not nearly good enough. Also, there were too many humorous couplets; Lehar was born to write seriously sentimental waltzes. At the Opéra, "Les Huguenots" was sung for the first time since war interrupted it in 1914, and the centen- ary of "Guillaume Tell" was also celebrated. Both of these performances had exceptional interest in the presence of the Irish tenor, Sullivan, who according to James Joyce has the sweetest voice on earth. T HE government is continuing its efforts to fin out whether Gaby Deslys was Marie- Elise-Gabrielle Caire of Marseille or Hedwige Navratil of Hatvan in Hungary. If the latter was the case, she was one of three Hedwige Navratils, as it seems there were a couple of others, one of whom has just turned up in the Paris courts. The fight, of course, is for money; Gaby Deslys left a fortune of nine mil- lion francs, a quarter of which went automatically to her family, the Caires; a quarter-million unautomatically to the American dancer, Harry Pilcer; and the rest to the poor and tubercular of Marseille. The N a vratils now say the Caires were not her family; neither PIlcer nor the poor of Marseille know